Hail Mary: Chapter 37
Hail Mary: An Enemies-to-Lovers Roommate Sports Romance (Red Zone Rivals)
Twenty-four hours ago, everything was different.
My biggest worry yesterday had been football. We had an away game against our rivals in two weeks after our bye this weekend, and it was all we could focus on. If we won, not only would it be a rivalry win, but it would secure a bowl game for us.
Coach had also told me there would be multiple scouts at this game â scouts who had been visiting our campus throughout the season with their eyes on our seniors.
On me.
Yesterday, I was full of hope. I had sped home with nothing but excitement flowing through my veins as I rushed to tell Mary. Yesterday was a whole different world, a completely different universe.
Today, I woke up in hell.
Mary never came home last night, and she ignored every single text and phone call from me. The only solace I found came at almost midnight when Clay texted me and told me she was at his and Gianaâs place. Iâd sucked in a breath of relief so fierce Iâd nearly collapsed.
But even though I knew she was safe, I still couldnât sleep.
Because safe or not, Iâd lost her all the same.
Every time I thought the words, my stomach would roll so violently I nearly puked. Then, Iâd immediately shove the thought down, suffocating it before it had the chance to invade my brain again.
I didnât lose her.
I couldnât lose her.
My chest was on fire all night and well into the morning, even as I got myself ready for the day. All I could see was Maryâs eyes when I realized what Iâd done, the way she looked at me like Iâd just proven every doubt she had about me correct.
And I guessed I had.
I didnât think about it from her perspective until it was too late. Hell, I didnât think about it at all. It was disrespectful to step in like some big bad motherfucker when sheâd already told me sheâd handled it. It didnât make anything better when I clocked that stupid bicho in the mouth. It didnât even make me feel better. All it did was piss me off more because he stood right back up, and then, he hurt Mary even more.
Because of me.
And to add more shit to the pile, Nero had me by the balls, too. If he went to the police, if he pressed charges⦠my career would be snuffed out before the flame had the chance to catch.
There was a bottomless pit of doom in my stomach with so much uncertainty. I didnât know if Nero really wouldnât press charges or if Iâd walk into a media shit storm at the stadium. I didnât know if Mary meant leave me alone as in for the night or forever.
It couldnât be forever.
I convinced myself that somehow it would all be okay as I dragged my ass to practice. Despite how dead I felt inside, how hard it was to breathe not knowing where I stood with Mary, I managed to put it all away and show up for my team. I balled out at practice, and to everyone on that field, I was just fine. I was better than fine. I was on fire.
Everyone, that was, except for Clay, Zeke, Riley, and my roommates.
They all watched me like a bomb that would detonate with one wrong step.
When practice was wrapped and we were in the locker room, they cornered me.
âWhat the hell happened?â Riley demanded in a hushed voice. âWhy are your knuckles scabbing and why did Mary sleep on Clayâs couch last night?â
I filled them in as emotionlessly as I could, locking everything down because otherwise I knew Iâd fall apart right then and there. And as a leader, as their captain â I couldnât do that in front of my team.
By the time I finished, they were all silent, their brows pinched together.
âShit,â Zeke said.
âYeah,â I agreed.
No one had time to offer a word of advice before Coach Leeâs voice boomed through the room.
âHernandez,â he said, and all eyes whipped to where he was standing in the doorway of his office. He tilted his head toward it with his lips pressed into a hard line.
Fuck.
I closed the door behind me once I dipped into his office, and when I sat down across from him, we both sat there silent. Coach finally let out a frustrated breath and said, âWe both know why weâre here, so letâs not fuck around.â
I nodded solemnly. âHow bad is it?â
âFortunately for you, it should stay out of the press. The guy came here threatening to press charges or go to the news, but we had⦠help,â he said carefully. âFrom some alumni who were eager to rectify the situation and keep you on the team.â
I squeezed my eyes closed, cramping at even the thought of someone handing over their hard-earned money to save my ass. I also wasnât an idiot. I knew that probably wasnât exactly illegal, but was also likely very frowned upon.
âGiana did a quick scrub this morning. She said thereâs not even a whisper of it, so we should be fine. We had him sign an NDA once both parties were satisfied.â
âAnd my parents?â
âYou get the honor of telling them.â
The way he said it, I knew there wasnât a choice to not tell them. Either I could, or he would if I took too long. I swallowed at the thought of telling my father, who would no doubt scold my ass for risking my career. But Mom?
Sheâd be heartbroken.
That was worse than any screaming Dad could do.
Coach let out another long breath, and then he shook his head, looking at me with such disappointment I wanted to curl into a ball and cry like a little boy. âWhat were you thinking, son?â
âI wasnât,â I answered immediately, honestly.
Coach nodded, and then something in him softened a bit the longer he watched me. âYou okay?â
âNo,â I said on a laugh, nose stinging. I sniffed it away. âI messed up. Iâm sorry, Coach,â I said, meeting his gaze. I hoped he felt how much I meant that. âI really am.â
Coach Lee looked like he didnât know if he wanted to scream at me, make me run laps, or give me a hug. In the end, he settled on another nod. âWhatever is going on, figure it out. We need you for the game next weekend. And those scouts wonât think twice before turning their backs on you if youâre not performing at the level they want to see.â
I nodded, and at this point, the souring of my stomach felt like it would be a new permanent state of being.
âYouâre on probation,â he added.
I wasnât surprised. âMeaning?â
âMeaning if you fuck up again, there wonât be a conversation. There wonât be help. There wonât be a way out of it.â He leveled his gaze with me. âFocus, son. The rest of your life is at stake here.â
After that, the day dragged by and happened in a flash all at once. I didnât know how I managed to stay alive long enough to ride home with the roommates at the end of it, all of us quiet and exhausted in the car.
No one said a word, but Kyleâs eyes caught mine in the rearview mirror from where he was driving. He nodded, wordlessly telling me he was there, and Braden squeezed my shoulder from where he sat beside me. Blake glanced back at me with concern, but then offered me a pitiful smile, trying to give me hope that I didnât think could ever exist in me again.
That was, until we pulled up and saw Maryâs car across the street.
Kyle barely put the car in park before I was rushing out of it and in the house and up the stairs. I burst through my door and felt the most relieving exhale leave me at the sight of Mary sitting on the bed.
Her hair was a wild nest piled into a bun on top of her head, and one look at her face told me sheâd slept as shitty as me last night. Palico was laying beside her, flicking her tail at me like even she knew what a moron Iâd been.
But Mary still wore one of my hoodies, and that sight along with the possible implication it held had me moving toward her.
The second I noticed all the bags and boxes packed up around the room, I froze again.
My eyes flicked from one box to the next, bouncing into my closet that was much less crowded now before sneaking a glance at the bathroom that was far too clean to have any trace of Mary left. Panic gripped my throat in a fist, and when my gaze met Maryâs, I had no choice.
I fell to my knees.
I fell hard, with a crack of bone to wood that made Maryâs eyes well with tears. She looked up to try to keep them from falling, but they seared down her cheeks, anyway.
âDonât go.â
They were the only words I could say, the only ones that made sense in my scrambled brain. I could say I was sorry a million times, I could promise her the whole world â but the one thing I needed her to hear above anything else was that I wanted her to stay.
I needed her to stay.
âIâm going to live with my parents,â she said, her voice a cracked whisper.
I closed my eyes, shaking my head, willing myself to wake up from this nightmare.
âIâve overstayed my welcome here as it is.â
I opened my eyes again. âYou know thatâs not true.â
âI donât know whatâs true anymore.â
My jaw ached with how hard I clenched it.
âLook, this was a bad idea from the start,â she said, not looking at me as she said it. But she stood, pulling Palico into her arms, and that made it feel so final that I could barely breathe. âLetâs just⦠go back to pretending we left each other back in high school, okay?â
âI donât want to pretend,â I said, climbing to my feet. My chest heaved as I stared at her. âI donât want to pretend I left you in high school because I didnât. I donât want to pretend like I didnât want you the second you moved across the street, even before I knew who you were. And I refuse to pretend that I donât want you now, more than ever, because I do know who you are.â
Maryâs face didnât show an ounce of emotion, but another tear slid down her cheek, landing silently on her shoulder. She clutched Palico closer.
I took the fact that she wasnât leaving yet as my last shot to make her stay.
âCan I hold you?â I asked on a desperate whisper. âPlease?â
Her lip wobbled, but she nodded, and as soon as she carefully sat the cat back on the bed, I swept her into my arms before she could take another breath.
She clung to me just as fiercely as I held her, and I closed my eyes against the emotion strangling me as I crushed her to me â one hand in her hair, the other wrapped completely around her. I inhaled her, telling my poor fucking heart that this wasnât over even as I felt her slipping away.
âIâm sorry,â I told her. âI shouldnât have gone last night. I was an idiot. I should have stayed with you, should have been here with you.â I shook my head, still holding onto her. âI didnât think. I fucked up. But I swear I will do everything to make it up to you. Please,â I begged. âStay.â
Mary choked on a sob, clutching me tighter, and I held her to me until she pressed her hands against my chest asking for space. When she looked up at me, I wanted to die.
She was in so much pain.
And it was because of me.
âI need some time, Leo,â she said, and her eyes didnât cower from my own. âThis dream that Iâve worked for forâ¦Â years⦠is just⦠gone.â
She stuttered, and I wanted to hurl myself off the roof.
âIâm jobless. Homeless. Broke.â She shrugged. âI have no idea where to go from here.â
âLet me go through it with you.â
Something hardened her then, and she stepped even farther away, out of my grasp.
My heart shattered at the thought that that might have been the last time I ever got to hold her.
âI donât trust you.â
The words slid through me like a hot knife, slicing me right in half like I was just a stick of butter.
âMary,â I tried.
âYou have the game,â she said, crossing her arms. âYou need to focus on yourself, and I need to focus on me. All of this happened so fast. One day I was full swing in the life Iâd created for myself, the one where I was living despite the hell you put me through. The next, I was in a heaven I never knew existed, wrapped up in everything that you are, that we are, together.â
I wanted her to stop there. I wanted that to be the end. But she sniffed and continued.
âAnd now, Iâm in hell again. Deeper, this time, because now Iâve lost the one thing that has always been mine despite what happened to me. I worked my ass off for this, Leo,â she said.
âI know,â I told her. I bit back the urge to remind her that it wasnât me who took it away from her. It was Nero.
But then I remembered that Iâd made matters worse. Sheâd had a plan, sheâd said â and I didnât doubt it. Mary was strong. She was smart. She could handle herself.
It was me who fucked everything up.
âWe just⦠we need to take a break,â she said with finality, picking up a duffle bag and tossing it over her shoulder. âMy parents will be here in twenty minutes. Could youâ¦â She swallowed. âCan you please not be here when they are?â
That gutted me.
Just a few weeks ago at our old high school football field, sheâd told me she wanted me to meet them.
Now, I felt like a shameful secret being locked away in a closet never to be found.
âIâll do whatever you need me to do,â I promised. âIâll leave. Iâll give you space.â I closed the distance between us, tentatively reaching out. When she didnât flinch, I slid my hands into her hair, framing her face, holding her gaze to mine. âBut I will not give up on us.â
She closed her eyes. âWhat if I need you to?â
âThen Iâll leave you disappointed.â I paused. âAgain. Because I canât do that, Stig. Iâ¦Â canât.â That last word left me like a guttural declaration of truth, one pulled from me against my will.
I didnât know if it was a laugh or a sob that came from her next, but I pressed my lips to her forehead, closing my eyes and praying harder than I had in my entire life that this wasnât the end for us.
âI love you, Mary,â I breathed.
She stilled in my grasp, and I pulled back until I was looking down at her again.
âI love you,â I repeated. âI may be a colossal fuck up. I may make mistakes. I may disappoint you and fall short in more ways than I measure up. But I love you, and that will never not be true.â
Mary covered my hands with her own, closing her eyes again and leaning into my palm. She let out a slow exhale.
Then, she peeled my hands off her and stepped away.
âRight now, I have to love myself,â she said softly.
My heart was a bloody, bruised, barely living thing â but I let her go.
I nodded. I held her gaze until I couldnât anymore. I turned and walked numbly down the stairs and right out the door without a plan of where Iâd go next. I just walked and walked and walked until my body refused to walk any longer. Iâd ended up somewhere in the North End, staring at people laughing and eating and drinking and enjoying their lives, all of them oblivious to the zombie among them.
Eventually, I texted Braden, and he came to pick me up.
We were quiet on the drive back, Braden driving my car because I knew I couldnât. When we pulled into the driveway, I looked at the door with a pit in my stomach.
âDid I lose her?â I asked.
Braden sighed, looking at the house and then at me. âSheâs gone, man.â
And all the strength Iâd been using to hold it together left me.
I didnât care that Braden was still there, that Kyle and Blake were now coming out of the house, too. It didnât matter if I did care. I was powerless against the emotional dam that split wide open inside me.
I somehow managed to push the car door open and stand up.
Then, I broke.
My roommates rushed to me. They werenât my friends in that moment. They werenât my teammates. They were my brothers. My family. And they held me while I fell apart.
âItâll be okay, man. Sheâll come back,â Kyle said.
The air pulsed, because every single one of us knew that was a promise that wasnât his to make.